18 June 2015 | 16 replies
Sometimes, the cost of having a website built by a professional is directly proportional to the lack if incoming traffic."
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27 April 2015 | 0 replies
What would be the own/rentals proportion you'll be looking for?
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29 April 2015 | 0 replies
Note: I realize whatever expenses there are need to be split proportionally between the rental days and personal use days, but let's ignore that aspect for now.
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5 May 2015 | 13 replies
There is no landlord in town profiting off of you and your family.The mistake I often see people make in this primary residence plan is that they buy the primary, and then do all the additions/glitter/and debt-funded improvements that push their costs way out of proportion.
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22 August 2015 | 2 replies
Seems like a great opportunity to me, but as this will be my first investment of this proportion I wanted to see if anyone could poke holes in my assumption.
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22 January 2016 | 28 replies
There is an "option," to call the note but in practice if its been performing for awhile (6+ months since funding) and you happen to transfer it to a LLC ( in the same proportion of ownership) most will not call it (what i've heard from multiple servicing departments).
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28 August 2015 | 2 replies
Or replace it with a new one, and properly compact the soil around it.
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27 August 2015 | 0 replies
Or replace it with a new one, and properly compact the soil around it.
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22 April 2015 | 16 replies
They are slumlords, huge difference.Cheap small houses with subsidized renters can cashflow really well, until you have to make a ton of repairs and take care of deferred maintenance or have a turnover and have to fix a bunch of stuff.Expensive houses cost more and typically rent for proportionally less, but have a better chance of appreciation.Expensive cities are just that - expensive, and often times rents are not proportional to what a less expensive city / area will yield.Most people find a balance somewhere in the middle, and it can take a couple deals to find that balance.
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25 April 2015 | 2 replies
The letter includes a timeline of communications with my contractor stating that he contacted them to let them know the asphalt was on its way to the site and was told at that time that permits had not yet been issued.I was told that while it was the County's right to order me to rip out the driveway, they were willing to take core samples to assess the compactness and depth of it's base, and have a engineering assessment conducted at my expense and, pending the outcome, possibly issue a retroactive permit.